Results for 'New England Anti-Vivisection Society'

975 found
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  1. Petition to Include Cephalopods as “Animals” Deserving of Humane Treatment under the Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.New England Anti-Vivisection Society, American Anti-Vivisection Society, The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, The Humane Society of the United States, Humane Society Legislative Fund, Jennifer Jacquet, Becca Franks, Judit Pungor, Jennifer Mather, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Lori Marino, Greg Barord, Carl Safina, Heather Browning & Walter Veit - forthcoming - Harvard Law School Animal Law and Policy Clinic.
  2.  13
    Democracy and anti-democracy in early modern England, 1603-1689.Cesare Cuttica & Markku Peltonen (eds.) - 2019 - Boston: Brill.
    Listen to the podcast here. This cross-disciplinary collection of essays examines – for the first time and in detail – the variegated notions of democracy put forward in seventeenth-century England. It thus shows that democracy was widely explored and debated at the time; that anti-democratic currents and themes have a long history; that the seventeenth century is the first period in English history where we nonetheless find positive views of democracy; and that whether early-modern writers criticised or advocated (...)
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  3.  22
    New England's generation. The great migration and the formation of society and culture in the seventeenth century.Boyd Stanley Schlenther - 1993 - History of European Ideas 17 (2-3):368-369.
  4.  9
    Chapter 13. The New England Non-Resistance Society.Peter Brock - 1968 - In Pacifism in the United States: From the Colonial Era to the First World War. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 559-584.
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  5. Transcendentalism in New England: a lecture delivered before the Society of philosophical enquiry.Caroline Wells Healey Dall - 1897 - Boston, Mass.,: Roberts brothers.
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  6.  16
    Chapter 14. The Ideology of the New England Non-Resistance Society.Peter Brock - 1968 - In Pacifism in the United States: From the Colonial Era to the First World War. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 585-615.
  7.  43
    Sympathy in Mind (1876–1900).Susan Lanzoni - 2009 - Journal of the History of Ideas 70 (2):265-287.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Sympathy in Mind (1876–1900)Susan LanzoniIn the April 1884 issue of Mind, William James published his influential account of emotion, which stressed the bodily and physiological constitution of various feeling-states.1 The article reflected new trends in physiological psychology, but came under attack by numerous respondents in the journal who argued that there was more to the emotions than physiology.2 As the evolutionary psychologist Hiram Stanley intoned, "emotions in the higher (...)
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  8.  7
    Education and the Professions.History of Education Society - 1973 - Routledge.
    Part of the educational system in England has been geared towards the preparation of particular professions, while the identity and status of members of some professions have depended significantly on the general education they have received. Originally published in 1973, this volume explores the interaction between education and the professions. It also looks at the education of the main professions in sixteenth century England and at how twentieth century university teaching is a key profession for the training of (...)
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  9.  29
    Commentary: Research Ethics after World War II: The Insular Culture of Biomedicine.Lara Freidenfelds & Allan M. Brandt - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (3):239-243.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Research Ethics after World War II: The Insular Culture of BiomedicineAllan M. Brandt (bio) and Lara Freidenfelds (bio)Human subjects research in the United States has only recently emerged as an important area of historical investigation. Over the last quarter century, scholars have begun the process of grounding within an historical context both the complex relationship between researchers and subjects and the processes by which biomedical knowledge is produced. Their (...)
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  10.  12
    The papers of the Metaphysical Society, 1869-1880: a critical edition.Catherine Hajdenko-Marshall, Bernard V. Lightman & Richard England (eds.) - 2015 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    The Metaphysical Society was founded in 1869 at the instigation of James Knowles (editor of the Contemporary Review and then of the Nineteenth Century) with a view to "collect, arrange, and diffuse Knowledge (whether objective or subjective) of mental and moral phenomena" (first resolution of the Society in April 1869). The Society was a private club which gathered together a latter-day clerisy. Building on the tradition of the Cambridge Apostles, they elected talented members from across the Victorian (...)
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  11.  22
    Queer Women in the Hookup Scene: Beyond the Closet?Paula England, Alison C. K. Fogarty, Shiri Regev-Messalem, Verta Taylor & Leila J. Rupp - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (2):212-235.
    The college hookup scene is a profoundly gendered and heteronormative sexual field. Yet the party and bar scene that gives rise to hookups also fosters the practice of women kissing other women in public, generally to the enjoyment of male onlookers, and sometimes facilitates threesomes involving same-sex sexual behavior between women. In this article, we argue that the hookup scene serves as an opportunity structure to explore same-sex attractions and, at least for some women, to later verify bisexual, lesbian, or (...)
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  12.  23
    Experiential Religion. [REVIEW]A. D. H. - 1972 - Review of Metaphysics 26 (1):169-170.
    This is a rich and rewarding book although its richness will be easily overlooked. It is in fact one of the first efforts to return American theology to one of its classical traditions, a theology of religious experience, not in the manner of scientism but religious experience in the manner of everyday human orientation. A review of this book may easily leave the impression of sentimental piety and lack of realism. Nothing could be further from the truth. The book is (...)
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  13.  55
    Charles S. Peirce's New England Neighbors and Embrace of Transcendentalism.Nicholas L. Guardiano - 2017 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 53 (2):216.
    In multiple autobiographical sketches, Charles S. Peirce identifies New England Transcendentalism as an essential part of his intellectual biography. A well-known instance is the passage opening "The Law of Mind" that identifies the setting of his childhood and early education within "the neighborhood of Concord": I may mention, for the benefit of those who are curious in studying mental biographies, that I was born and reared in the neighborhood of Concord,—I mean in Cambridge,—at the time when Emerson, Hedge, and (...)
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  14.  13
    Transcendentalist hermeneutics: institutional authority and the higher criticism of the Bible.Richard A. Grusin - 1991 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    American literary historians have viewed Ralph Waldo Emerson’s resignation from the Unitarian ministry in 1832 in favor of a literary career as emblematic of a main current in American literature. That current is directed toward the possession of a self that is independent and fundamentally opposed to the “accoutrements of society and civilization” and expresses a Transcendentalist antipathy toward all institutionalized forms of religious observance. In the ongoing revision of American literary history, this traditional reading of the supposed (...)-institutionalism of the Transcendentalists has been duly detailed and continually supported. Richard A. Grusin challenges both traditional and revisionist interpretations with detailed contextual studies of the hermeneutics of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Theodore Parker. Informed by the past two decades of critical theory, Grusin examines the influence of the higher criticism of the Bible—which focuses on authorship, date, place of origin, circumstances of composition, and the historical credibility of biblical writings—on these writers. The author argues that the Transcendentalist appeal to the authority of the “self” is not an appeal to a source of authority independent of institutions, but to an authority fundamentally innate. (shrink)
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  15.  89
    Dog fight: Darwin as animal advocate in the antivivisection controversy of 1875.David Allan Feller - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 40 (4):265-271.
    The traditional characterization of Charles Darwin as a strong advocate of physiological experimentation on animals was posited in Richard French’s Antivivisection and medical science in Victorian England, where French portrayed him as a soldier in Thomas Huxley’s efforts to preserve anatomical experimentation on animals unfettered by government regulation. That interpretation relied too much on, inter alia, Huxley’s own description of the legislative battles of 1875, and shared many historians’ propensity to foster a legacy of Darwin as a leader among (...)
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  16. Illustrations of human vivisection..Sydney Richmond Vivisection Reform Society & Taber (eds.) - 1907 - Chicago,: Vivisection Reform Society.
     
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  17.  16
    (1 other version)Preparing STS Teachers in New England.Lloyd H. Barrow - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (5-6):932-934.
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  18. The Flowering of New England, a Literary History, 1815-1865.Van Wyck Brooks - 1937 - Science and Society 1 (2):262-265.
     
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  19. Consciousness in New England: From Puritanism and Ideas to Psychoanalysis and Semiotic.James Hoopes - 1990 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 26 (4):530-539.
     
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  20. The Transformation of the New England Theology.Robert C. Whittemore - 1988 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 24 (3):432-435.
     
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  21.  36
    Drawing the life-blood of physiology: Vivisection and the Physiologists' dilemma, 1870–1900.Stewart Richards - 1986 - Annals of Science 43 (1):27-56.
    SummaryWithin thirty years from 1870, English physiology was transformed from a subsidiary branch of anatomy to an experimental school of international reputation. An inevitable consequence of this metamorphosis was disclosure of the intrinsic nature of the new discipline, in particular by Burdon Sanderson's Handbook for the Physiological Laboratory (1873). By transmitting Continental methods to England, the Handbook gave direction to its awakening science, and at the same time represented a provocative target for attacks by the antivivisectionists. In uncertain defence (...)
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  22.  14
    Andrew Brown, Church and Society in England, 1000–1500. (Social History in Perspective.) Basingstoke, Eng., and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. Pp. x, 253. [REVIEW]Ilicia J. Sprey - 2006 - Speculum 81 (4):1166-1167.
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  23. James Hoopes, "Consciousness in New England: From Puritanism and Ideas to Psychoanalysis and Semiotic". [REVIEW]Vincent M. Colapietro - 1990 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 26 (4):530.
     
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  24.  24
    Consciousness in New England[REVIEW]Robert S. Corrington - 1990 - Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 18 (56):39-41.
  25.  54
    Tomás Carrascón, Anti-Roman Catholic Propaganda, and the Circulation of Ideas in Jacobean England.Rady Roldán-Figueroa - 2013 - History of European Ideas 39 (2):169-206.
    Summary The article examines the figure of Tomás Carrascón de las Cortes y Medrano (1595–c. 1633) and his pamphleteering activity during the second decade of the seventeenth century in England. A close look at his anti-Catholic pamphlets, Hispanus conversus (London, 1623), Scrutamini Scripturas: The Exhortation of a Spanish Converted Monke (London, 1624), and Miracles Unmasked (London, 1625), reveals his astute use of Spanish and Portuguese Catholic sources against Rome. An examination of his reference lists and marginal annotations discloses (...)
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  26.  11
    “Helped put in a quilt:”: Men's work and male intimacy in nineteenth-century new England.Karen V. Hansen - 1989 - Gender and Society 3 (3):334-354.
    By examining the case of one man in the early nineteenth century, this article challenges the assumptions of separate work and emotional lives for men and women and raises questions for the study of gender. The experience of Brigham Nims, as revealed in his diaries and letters, demonstrates that men and women did not live their lives in completely separate spheres during this period. Men could ignore the prescriptive adages of advice manuals and ministers, and regularly break gender-role stereotypes, yet (...)
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  27.  27
    Theodor W. Adorno.Gerard Delanty (ed.) - 2004 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE.
    Theodor W.Adorno was one of the towering intellectuals of the twentieth century. His contributions cover such a myriad of fields, including the sociology of culture, social theory, the philosophy of music, ethics, art and aesthetics, film, ideology, the critique of modernity and musical composition, that it is difficult to assimilate the sheer range and profundity of his achievement. His celebrated friendship with Walter Benjamin has produced some of the most moving and insightful correspondence on the origins and objects of the (...)
  28.  24
    "Reason and Religion": The Science of Anglicanism.Raymond D. Tumbleson - 1996 - Journal of the History of Ideas 57 (1):131-156.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Reason and Religion”: The Science of AnglicanismRaymond D. TumblesonThis essay explores a rhetoric of “reason” in Anglican anti-Catholic polemics during the short and turbulent reign of James II. This reign witnessed an intense propaganda battle between Catholic and Anglican pamphleteers because the former for the first time in over a century were permitted openly to put their case, and in response the latter defended their doctrine and status (...)
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  29.  16
    Ethics, Aging, and Society: The Critical Turn.Martha Holstein, Jennifer Parks & Mark Waymack - 2010 - Springer Publishing.
    Ethics, Aging and Society...is the first major work in ten years to critically address issues and methodologies in aging and ethics...This well-organized volume begins theoretically and offers new ways of thinking about ethics that can handle the complexities and realities of aging in particular social contexts."--Choice This new research-based book, by experts in the field of ethics, is excellent and much-needed...I challenge you to consider reading this book and seeing all the ways in which you might be forced to (...)
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  30.  79
    The Public Life of a Woman of Wit and Quality: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Vogue for Smallpox Inoculation.Diana Barnes - 2012 - Feminist Studies 38 (2):330-62.

    During a smallpox epidemic in April 1721, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu asked Dr. Charles Maitland to "engraft" her daughter, thus instigating the first documented inoculation for smallpox (_Variola_ virus) in England. Engrafting, or variolation, was a means of conferring immunity to smallpox by placing pus taken from a smallpox pustule under the skin of an uninfected person to create a local infection. The introduction of infectious viral matter, however, could trigger fullblown smallpox, and the practice was controversial for both (...)

    Montagu’s pioneering role in the smallpox debate is undoubtedly significant: she instigated the first smallpox inoculation on English soil, and she was largely responsible for making the practice acceptable in elite circles. My interest in this essay is in the nature and significance of Montagu’s reputation as an inoculation pioneer. I will argue that her reputation was based on the particular combination of her social position as a Whig and an aristocratic woman; her interest in progressive and enlightened forms of social, political, and scientific thought; her standing in influential literary circles; and, not least, the force of her own personality. In broad terms, I offer Montagu’s involvement in the smallpox debate as a case study in a new kind of public role becoming available to elite women in the early eighteenth century — a role that caused considerable discomfort among her peers and in the medical community, and one that stimulated a widespread controversy in print publications of the day. (shrink)
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  31.  73
    England's new Mental Health Act represents law catching up with science: a commentary on Peter Lepping's ethical analysis of the new mental health legislation in England and Wales.Anthony Maden - 2007 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2:16-.
    When seen in the historical context of psychiatry's relatively recent discovery of violence and risk, along with society's adoption of more risk-averse attitudes, the Mental Health Act 2007 in England and Wales is an ethical and proportionate measure.
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  32.  8
    Neither Left nor Right, but Catholic: Responding to the New Aggressive Anti-Catholicism.Stephen M. Krason - 2011 - Catholic Social Science Review 16:291-292.
    This article, which inaugurated SCSS president Stephen M. Krason’s monthly online column, “Neither Left Nor Right but Catholic”, takes note of an important address given by Archbishop Charles Chaput in Europe in which he foresees increasing repression by an arch-secularist political and cultural elite against Catholics and the Church when they try to bring the Church’s message to society. This represents a deeply disturbing narrowing of the meaning of religious liberty to mere freedom of worship.
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  33. There will be a conference on'A Fresh Look at the Free Society: The New Europe and Post-Critical Philosophy', at the University of Nottingham, England, 4--6 September 1992. The cost, inclusive of accommodation and meals, is£ 85. For further details please write to. [REVIEW]R. T. Allen - 1991 - Synthese 88 (418).
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  34. "Cultural additivity" and how the values and norms of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism co-exist, interact, and influence Vietnamese society: A Bayesian analysis of long-standing folktales, using R and Stan.Quan-Hoang Vuong, Manh-Tung Ho, Viet-Phuong La, Dam Van Nhue, Bui Quang Khiem, Nghiem Phu Kien Cuong, Thu-Trang Vuong, Manh-Toan Ho, Hong Kong T. Nguyen, Viet-Ha T. Nguyen, Hiep-Hung Pham & Nancy K. Napier - manuscript
    Every year, the Vietnamese people reportedly burned about 50,000 tons of joss papers, which took the form of not only bank notes, but iPhones, cars, clothes, even housekeepers, in hope of pleasing the dead. The practice was mistakenly attributed to traditional Buddhist teachings but originated in fact from China, which most Vietnamese were not aware of. In other aspects of life, there were many similar examples of Vietnamese so ready and comfortable with adding new norms, values, and beliefs, even contradictory (...)
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  35.  32
    (1 other version)The open society and its enemies: one-volume edition.Karl R. Popper - 1994 - Princeton: Princeton University Press. Edited by George Soros, Alan Ryan, E. H. Gombrich & Karl R. Popper.
    One of the most important books of the twentieth century, Karl Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies is an uncompromising defense of liberal democracy and a powerful attack on the intellectual origins of totalitarianism. Popper was born in 1902 to a Viennese family of Jewish origin. He taught in Austria until 1937, when he emigrated to New Zealand in anticipation of the Nazi annexation of Austria the following year, and he settled in England in 1949. Before the (...)
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  36.  27
    Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries Science, Technology & Society in Seventeenth-Century England. By Robert K. Merton. New York: Howard Fertig, 1970. Pp. xxxii + 279. $11. [REVIEW]C. Webster - 1972 - British Journal for the History of Science 6 (1):94-94.
  37.  47
    Closed Societies, Open Minds: Andrzej Walicki, Isaiah Berlin and the Writing of Russian History During the Cold War.Gary M. Hamburg - 2006 - Dialogue and Universalism 16 (1/2):7-72.
    This article compares the thinking of Andrzej Walicki and Isaiah Berlin on the nineteenth-century Russian intelligentsia and on Soviet totalitarianism. It suggests that Berlin saw totalitarianism as an externally imposed political system, whereas Walicki understood totalitarianism to depend both on external pressure and inner coercion. The article draws on a variety of published and unpublished sources, including personal interviews with Walicki and Berlin’s archives at the New Bodleian Library in Oxford, England.
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  38.  20
    James Masschaele, Jury, State, and Society in Medieval England. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. Pp. vii, 271. $89.95. [REVIEW]Paul Brand - 2010 - Speculum 85 (4):998-999.
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  39. Fatal Divisions: Hume on Religion, Sympathy, and the Peace of Society.Jennifer A. Herdt - 1994 - Dissertation, Princeton University
    Epistemological issues are usually taken to be David Hume's central preoccupation. Attending to the role of sympathy in Hume's thought reveals, however, that his primary aim is to secure the conditions for social peace and prosperity in 18th-century Scotland and beyond, a peace particularly threatened by religious conflict. This perspective not only discloses the unity of Hume's ethical, political, aesthetic, and historical writings, it also suggests that the driving forces in the development of modern ethical and religious thought are ethical (...)
     
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  40. Myth and Society in Ancient Greece.Janet Lloyd (ed.) - 1988 - Zone Books.
    In this groundbreaking study, Jean Pierre-Vernant delineates a compelling new vision of ancient Greece. Myth and Society in Ancient Greece takes us far from the calm and familiar images of Polykleitos and the Parthenon to reveal a fundamentally other culture one of slavery, of masks and death, of scapegoats, of ritual hunting and ecstasies.Vernant's provocative discussion of various institutions and practices including war, marriage, and sacrifice details the complex intersection of the religious, social, and political structures of ancient Greece. (...)
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  41.  12
    One Holy and Happy Society: The Public Theology of Jonathan Edwards.Gerald Robert McDermott - 1992 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Jonathan Edwards was arguably this country's greatest theologian and its finest philosopher before the nineteenth century. His school if disciples exerted enormous influence on the religious and political cultures of late colonial and early republican America. Hence any study of religion and politics in early America must take account of this theologian and his legacy. Yet historians still regard Edward's social theory as either nonexistent or underdeveloped. Gerald McDermott demonstrates, to the contrary, that Edwards was very interested in the social (...)
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  42.  47
    Science and Social Passion: The Case of Seventeenth-Century EnglandScience and Society in Restoration England.John Evelyn and His World. A BiographyWitch-Hunting, Magic and the New Philosophy. An Introduction to Debates of the Scientific Revolution, 1450-1750.The Reenchantment of the World.The Death of Nature. Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution. [REVIEW]Margaret Jacob, Michael Hunter, John Bowle, Brian Easlea, Morris Berman & Carolyn Merchant - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (2):331.
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  43.  28
    The Alt-Right’s continuation of the ‘cultural war’ in Euro-American societies.Tamir Bar-On - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 163 (1):43-70.
    In this paper, I argue that the Alt-Right needs to be taken seriously by the liberal establishment, the general public, and leftist cultural elites for five main reasons: 1) its ‘right-wing Gramscianism’ borrows from the French New Right and the French and pan-European Identitarian movement. This means that it is engaged in the continuation of a larger Euro-American metapolitical struggle to change hearts and minds on issues related to white nationalism, anti-Semitism, and racialism; 2) it is indebted to the (...)
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  44.  13
    Law, Ethics and Society: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives.Craig Paterson & Stephan Breu (eds.) - 2019 - JHPU Press.
    This collection reflects the result of interactive academic work initiated by Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi University Inc., Miami, Florida, during the academic year 2018, and also the scholarly work of academics supporting our University. The authors include international academics from the United States of America, Great Britain, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Switzerland, Austria, Serbia and Macedonia. Table of Contents: About the Authors; Craig Paterson--Contextualism & the History of Philosophy; Darko Bekic--Triangle Concept of Unification-Demilitarization Neutralisation of Korea: An Outline; Orlando Mardner--Economic Dimensions of Armed (...)
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  45. Javier Auyero is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the State Univer-sity of New York at Stony Brook. His first book Poor People's Politics (Duke University Press, 2001) won the New England Council for Latin American Studies Best Book Prize and was a C. Wright Mills Award Finalist. His second book, Contentious Lives. Two Argentine Women. [REVIEW]Ivano Bison - 2004 - Theory and Society 33:483-485.
  46.  19
    Perfectly Prep: Gender Extremes at a New England Prep School. Sarah A. Chase. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 2008. viii+350pp. [REVIEW]Cleti Cervoni - 2009 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 37 (1):ii-iii.
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  47. Robert C. Whittemore, "The Transformation of New England Theology". [REVIEW]James Hoopes - 1988 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 24 (3):432.
     
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  48.  58
    Theorising Post-Secular Society.Brian T. Trainor - 2007 - Philosophy and Theology 19 (1-2):95-124.
    In this article, I speak self-consciously as a man of faith addressing both believers and non-believers, but with the latter especially in mind. I suggest that we are currently witnessing (i) a highly significant departure from the ‘old’ model of liberal society that championed a sacred-secular divide, where the state was (only) a neutral umpire with a deliberately cultivated attitude of ‘studied public indifference’ to the ‘inner life’ of the vast host of (private) associations that itwas obliged to impartially (...)
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  49.  36
    Margaret Cavendish and the Royal Society.Emma Wilkins - 2014 - Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science 68 (3):245-260.
    It is often claimed that Margaret Cavendish was an anti-experimentalist who was deeply hostile to the activities of the early Royal Society—particularly in relation to Robert Hooke's experiments with microscopes. Some scholars have argued that her views were odd or even childish, while others have claimed that they were shaped by her gender-based status as a scientific ‘outsider’. In this paper I examine Cavendish's views in contemporary context, arguing that her relationship with the Royal Society was more (...)
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  50.  6
    Peculiarities of the Development of Information Culture in the Domestic Society Under the Conditions of the Russian-Ukrainian War.Олена Вікторівна ПРУДНИКОВА - 2024 - Epistemological studies in Philosophy, Social and Political Sciences 7 (1):114-121.
    The phenomenon of information culture in the context of the Russian-Ukrainian war is analyzed. It has been proven that changes in the priorities of the development of information culture during the war are determined by the course of spiritual confrontation with the enemy, accelerated transformations of public consciousness, the peculiarities of state information policy, and the urgent need to protect the country’s information sovereignty. It is argued that under the influence of the war in Ukraine, including in the spiritual and (...)
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